Skip to main content

CNN reports that parts of the Russian dossier have been corroborated. Calm down.

Screenshot/CNN.com

At 5 pm Friday, CNN’s website splashed an exclusive headline — “US investigators corroborate some aspects of the Russia dossier” — in what sounded like a major development in the unconfirmed allegations that the Russian government had blackmail material on President Donald Trump.

But it wasn’t quite that. There was no confirmation of the alleged sex tape of Trump and prostitutes, or any major headway on rumors that Trump’s aides were working with foreign nationals during the election — or anything that “relates to the salacious allegations,” or even Trump, for that matter, CNN reported.

Instead, it was about the conversations between Russian officials and individuals detailed in the dossier, which previously could not be corroborated. CNN’s sources would not confirm which specific conversations, but this is what they did find:

But the intercepts do confirm that some of the conversations described in the dossier took place between the same individuals on the same days and from the same locations as detailed in the dossier, according to the officials. CNN has not confirmed whether any content relates to then-candidate Trump.

The corroboration, based on intercepted communications, has given US intelligence and law enforcement “greater confidence” in the credibility of some aspects of the dossier as they continue to actively investigate its contents, these sources say.

The story is that US intelligence agencies before could not corroborate any part of the dossier — related to Trump or otherwise — and now have been able to verify at least some of its reports. However, notably, they are not ready to pass judgment on whether this development means the Russian government actually does have blackmail on the president.

Unsurprisingly, White House press secretary Sean Spicer continued to deny all reports related to the dossier, and called CNN “fake news” — as reported by CNN:

Reached for comment this afternoon, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said, “We continue to be disgusted by CNN’s fake news reporting.”

Spicer later called back and said, “This is more fake news. It is about time CNN focused on the success the President has had bringing back jobs, protecting the nation, and strengthening relationships with Japan and other nations. The President won the election because of his vision and message for the nation.”

The week before Trump’s inauguration, CNN reported that President Obama and Trump had been briefed on the dossier with a two-page document summarizing its findings. BuzzFeed published that document in full.

Further reading on the Russian dossier scandal:

More in Politics

ISIS? Russian sabotage? The biggest security threats at these Olympics.ISIS? Russian sabotage? The biggest security threats at these Olympics.
Olympics

Officials say Paris will be the “safest place in the world” for the Olympics. Here’s what they’re up against.

By Joshua Keating
Nancy Pelosi is still in chargeNancy Pelosi is still in charge
Politics

The former speaker’s singular influence most recently played a role in President Biden’s decision to end his candidacy.

By Li Zhou
The one thing Veep captures better than any other political showThe one thing Veep captures better than any other political show
Culture

With Kamala Harris’s ascendancy, the series is on everyone’s mind — and the reason it resonates goes deeper than you might think.

By Whizy Kim
Paris 2024: Olympics news and updatesParis 2024: Olympics news and updates
LIVE
By Gabriela Fernandez
Joe Biden’s enormous, contradictory, and fragile climate legacyJoe Biden’s enormous, contradictory, and fragile climate legacy
Climate

If elected, Trump could slow down Biden’s progress, but the shift to clean energy is unstoppable.

By Umair Irfan
“What was not a race yesterday is a race today”: David Axelrod on Biden dropping out“What was not a race yesterday is a race today”: David Axelrod on Biden dropping out
2024 Elections

What a fresh face might mean for the November presidential election.

By Sean Rameswaram and Bryan Walsh